America's Youth Has Entrepreneurial Spirit, New Poll Finds
20 12월 2005 - 11:00PM
PR Newswire (US)
Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education Fund Awards $1 Million Grant to
Junior Achievement to Link Students' Interest in Business History
With Entrepreneurial Principles STAMFORD, Conn., Dec. 20
/PRNewswire/ -- The Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education Fund
announced today that it has awarded a high-impact, $1 million
multi-year grant to JA Worldwide (Junior Achievement) to develop JA
Business and Economics: A U.S. History Perspective (working title),
a classroom-based program that will use volunteers from the local
business community to educate middle-school students about
America's rich and storied economic history, beginning in the fall
of 2006. Contrary to recent concerns about American students'
ability to compete in the global workforce of the future, a new
poll commissioned by Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education Fund and
JA Worldwide suggests that students exhibit a strong interest in
business and have learned basic facts of business history. JA
Business and Economics: A U.S. History Perspective is designed to
take students to the next level by linking business history with
entrepreneurial principles. The program will serve a wide variety
of children of all socio-economic backgrounds. The Pitney Bowes
Literacy and Education Fund/JA Worldwide Survey of Business
Literacy was conducted by Harris Interactive(R) between November 16
and 22, 2005, polling 948 youngsters ages 10 to 15. The results
suggest that America's middle grades students have the "right
stuff" to begin engaging more deeply with the principles of
business success. For example, 92 percent of the students polled
could identify cotton as the staple crop of the pre-Civil War
South. Seventy-eight percent recognized Henry Ford as the inventor
of the assembly line. Even on a tough question asking for the name
of a steel tycoon associated with "a New York concert hall ... and
a charitable foundation," 59% chose the name Andrew Carnegie.
However, some of the data show that girls may be slightly less
knowledgeable than boys on some aspects of U.S. business history.
On average, 84 percent of the boys queried correctly identified
Henry Ford as the inventor of the assembly line, compared with 72
percent of girls. JA Business and Economics: A U.S. History
Perspective aims to make the most of students' innate interest and
knowledge base by providing hands-on learning experiences and
business role models. "Tomorrow's entrepreneurs should apply the
important lessons learned from history in order to compete more
effectively in the global economy," said David S. Chernow,
president and chief executive officer of JA Worldwide. "The
extremely generous grant from the Pitney Bowes Literacy and
Education Fund will enable us to develop an exciting curriculum,
giving students knowledge and tools to help them succeed in life.
This partnership will show what can truly be accomplished when we
work together to support the future leaders of tomorrow." "The
Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education fund invests in literacy as the
basic building block of communication and life success," said Polly
O'Brien Morrow, president of the Pitney Bowes Literacy and
Education Fund. "Junior Achievement's program aligns with our
mission by helping students become literate in economic history in
a way that will have a positive impact on their lives and on our
communities." The Literacy and Education Fund grant will support
the development and implementation of the curriculum to be used for
the JA Business and Economics: A U.S. History Perspective, which
has the potential to reach students in more than 2,200 middle
schools nationwide. The program brings local business leader
volunteers into schools to educate students about free enterprise
and the role that entrepreneurs have played in our nation's
history. The program focuses on key elements of American business
and economic history in six categories: agriculture, communication,
immigration, industrialization, natural resources and
transportation. The JA Worldwide grant is part of a $1.4 million
commitment that the Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education Fund
recently announced to literacy and education organizations
nationwide. Survey Methodology Harris Interactive(R) conducted the
online survey between November 16 and 22, 2005 among a nationwide
sample of 1,702 U.S. youth ages 8-18 years old of whom 834 were
male and 868 were female, and 948 of the total sample were aged
10-15 years. Figures for age, gender, race/ethnicity, highest level
of education, highest level of parents' education and region were
weighted where necessary to align them with their actual
proportions in the population. In theory with a probability sample
of this size one could say with 95 percent certainty that the
results for the overall sample have a sampling error of plus or
minus 3 percentage points. Sampling error for the sub-sample
results of 10-15 year olds is plus or minus 3 percentage points.
This online sample is not a probability sample. About Pitney Bowes
Literacy and Education Fund The Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education
Fund is a private foundation. The Fund's mission is to provide
funding to literacy and education initiatives in key locations
where Pitney Bowes has a significant presence. For information
about the Pitney Bowes Literacy and Education Fund, go to
http://www.pb.com/communityinvestments. General information about
Pitney Bowes is available through the Investor Relations portion of
the company's website at http://www.pb.com/. About Junior
Achievement (JA Worldwide) JA Worldwide is the world's largest
organization dedicated to educating young people about business,
economics and entrepreneurship. Through a dedicated volunteer
network, JA Worldwide provides in-school and after-school programs
for students in grades K-12. JA Worldwide offers educational
programs that focus on seven key content areas: business,
citizenship, economics, entrepreneurship, ethics/character,
financial literacy, and career development. Today, 142 offices
reach approximately four million students in the United States,
with more than three million students served by operations in 96
countries worldwide. For more information, visit
http://www.ja.org/. For further information contact: Kim Holt/Nancy
Zakhary Brainerd Communicators 212-986-6667 ; Peter Kerr Pitney
Bowes Literacy and Education Fund 203-351-6350 Stephanie Bell JA
Worldwide 719-540-6171 DATASOURCE: The Pitney Bowes Literacy and
Education Fund CONTACT: Kim Holt, or Nancy Zakhary, , both of
Brainerd Communicators, +1-212-986-6667; Peter Kerr, Pitney Bowes
Literacy and Education Fund, +1-203-351-6350, ; Stephanie Bell, JA
Worldwide, +1-719-540-6171, Web site: http://www.pb.com/
http://www.pb.com/communityinvestments http://www.ja.org/
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